CONTACT
For general inquiries to the Project and related work, please contact:
Zachary Tumin
Special Assistant to the Director and Faculty Chair, Science, Technology, and Public Policy Program
Phone: 617-495-1960
Email: zachary_tumin@hks.harvard.edu
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Belfer Center Home > Programs/Projects > Science, Technology, and Public Policy > Explorations in Cyber International Relations > Contact
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For general inquiries to the Project and related work, please contact:
Zachary Tumin
Special Assistant to the Director and Faculty Chair, Science, Technology, and Public Policy Program
Phone: 617-495-1960
Email: zachary_tumin@hks.harvard.edu
Learn More
Joseph S. Nye, Jr. is University Distinguished Service Professor and former Dean of Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government.
Joseph Nye's bio >
Joseph Nye's publications >
Falling Prey to Cybercrime: Implications for Business and the Economy
As American businesses, inventors, and artists market, sell, and distribute their products worldwide via the Internet, the threat from criminals and criminal organizations who want to profit illegally from their hard work grows. The threat from other nations wanting to jump start their industries without making the intellectual investment is even more disturbing. This fleecing of America must stop. We can no longer afford complacency and silence—we must find and use as many market levers as possible to change the path we are on.
Cyber Power
Power depends upon context, and the rapid growth of cyber space is an important new context in world politics. The low price of entry, anonymity, and asymmetries in vulnerability means that smaller actors have more capacity to exercise hard and soft power in cyberspace than in many more traditional domains of world politics. The largest powers are unlikely to be able to dominate this domain as much as they have others like sea or air. But cyberspace also illustrates the point that diffusion of power does not mean equality of power or the replacement of governments as the most powerful actors in world politics.
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